J. Weingarten, Inc. v. Sanchez

228 S.W.2d 303, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1950
Docket12147
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 228 S.W.2d 303 (J. Weingarten, Inc. v. Sanchez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Weingarten, Inc. v. Sanchez, 228 S.W.2d 303, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 499 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This was an action by Patricio Sanchez and .wife for the death of their minor son, Fredrico, who received the injuries from which he died after he alighted from a school bus on U. S. Highway No. 59 in Fort Bend County, about four o’clock in the afternoon of October 26, 1946, when he attempted to cross the highway from behind the bus from which he had alighted and was struck by a truck belonging to J. Weingarten, Inc., which was traveling in the opposite direction from that in which the bus was headed. He died about an hour and half later in the hospital without having regained consciousness.1 At the time of his death he was 14 years and 20 days old.

Defendant’s answer consisted of a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. And defendant interplead third-party defendants, Basilian . Fathers and Robert Aguilar, the owner and driver, respectively, of the school bus from which Fredrico had alighted, thereby suing said third-party defendants for indemnity and for contribution in case plaintiffs recovered any judgment against defendant.

The third-party defendants answered defendant’s suit against them for contribution — so far as need be noted here — that defendant’s truck driver’s negligence was the sole proximate cause of the accident; they further alleged that Basilian Fathers is a public charity and -as such conducted a school at Rosenberg, which was attended by Fredrico, and in connection with said school operated the bus in which Fredrico had been transported, and that Fredrico was a guest within the meaning of R.C.S. Art. 2212.. And Basilian Fathers pled that it was immune from recovery for the negligence. of its bus driver, if any, unless it was shown that Basilian Fathers was negligent in employing or keeping said bus driver.

By supplemental petition, in answer to Basilian Fathers’ plea of immunity, defendant ' pled that ■ Basilian Fathers carried 'public liability insurance covering the operation of the school bus and so was not entitled to immunity to the extent of the insurance" coverage. The third-party defendants excepted to defendant’s plea of insurance and the court sustained said exception and struck defendant’s said supplemental petition. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant and the third-party defendants each moved for directed verdicts. The court granted the motion of third-party defendant Basilian Fathers, and refused the motions of defendant and third-party defendant Robert Aguilar. And, over timely objections and exceptions of defendant to the court’s charge, the case was submitted to the jury upon some 48 special issues. The court also refused special charges and special issues requested by defendant. The defendant also timely urged its motion for judgment - non obstante veredicto, which was refused. The court rendered judgment upon the jury’s answers to the special issues, etc., as follows: (1) That plaintiffs recover of defendant $15,551.50; (2) That defendant recover nothing against third-party defendant Aguilar.

Defendant predicates its appeal upon numerous points, which cover pages 3 to 23 of its original brief and pages 1 to 4 of its “Additional Brief to Appellant’s Original Brief”. Such disregard by defendant of Rule 418, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, renders it impossible to reproduce its said points here. However, at no small labor, we have framed this opinion so as to rule directly, or by implication, upon all of its points.

At this point it is proper to state that Fort Bend County is within the, jurisr *306 diction of both the 23rd Judicial and of the 130th Judicial District Courts. By the law creating the 130th District Court, it is provided that there shall be but one general docket for -both of said courts and that one clerk shall serve them as “District Clerk of Fort Bend County”, who shall keep but one set of minutes, and it is also provided that all pleadings shall be addressed to “The District Court of Fort Bend County”. Art. 199, Sec. 130, subsec. 5. In short, the effect of the cited statute is practically to make the jurisdiction of the 23rd and 130th District Courts, and the functions of the judges thereof, as interrelated and interlocking as is possible and yet preserve their identity as separate and distinct district courts.

It appears from the record that all parties, during the progress of the trial, filed pleadings or instruments which bore the various captions of “The District Court of Fort Bend County, 23rd Judicial District”, and “The District Court of Fort Bend County, 130th Judicial District”, and “District Court of Fort Bend County”. Plaintiffs’ first amended original petition, for instance, bore the caption “The District Court of Fort Bend County, 23rd Judicial District”, but, as indicated, other of plaintiffs’ pleadings and instruments bore the various captions noted, and so with respect to the other parties. However, so far as we 'have noted, only the Honorable G. P. Hardy, Jr., Judge of the 130th District Court, exercised any judicial function in connection with the case.

It can not be held that it appears upon the face of the record, so as to authorize defendant to raise the point on appeal for the first time, that the case was filed in the 23rd District Court and was tried in the 130th District Court without having 'been transferred, and that consequently the court trying the case had no jurisdiction thereof. The captions on the pleadings were at most but directions to the clerk, and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we must conclude that both he and the Judge properly performed their functions. So we conclude that the case was filed as well as tried in the 130th District Court, — the clerk’s file mark on the various instruments merely shows “District Court of Fort Bend Co.”. But should we be mistaken in the view just expressed, and if for any reason it should appear that the case was lodged in the 23rd District Court in the first instance, we know of no reason why the parties to a suit might not waive a 'formal written order transferring the case from the 23rd to the 130th Judicial District Court, and thereby consent to such informal transfer. Furthermore, we have noted many instances in which the defendant in the progress of the trial invoked the exercise of the jurisdiction of the court in which the case was tried. The 130th District Court had at least potential jurisdiction to try the case, and, in the sound administration of justice, courts will not permit a party to invoke the exercise of jurisdiction within a court’s general powers, and then reverse the court’s orders- on the ground that the court in question was without jurisdiction. Spence v. State Nat. Bank, Tex.Com.App., 5 S.W.2d 754, 756; Panos v. Foley Brothers Dry Goods Co., Tex.Civ.App., 198 S.W.2d 494, 496.

Before setting out the substance of the answers of the jury to the special issues, and in order to enable them to be readily understood, we here note: That plaintiffs were a Mexican tenant farmer and his wife, who lived on a farm on the north side of U. S.

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228 S.W.2d 303, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-weingarten-inc-v-sanchez-texapp-1950.